How To Roll Back NVIDIA Drivers (And Why You Might Want To)

Most of us know this scenario: GeForce gives you a pop-up thatnew NVIDIA drivers are ready to be installed, and then restart the computer. Oftentimes, that’s all that happens, and you go about your day without even thinking about it. But sometimes, something goes wrong. A driver causing issues isn’t an uncommon problem, but you’ll want to know why and when to roll them back — and you may want tomanually restart your GPUto see if it helps first before rolling them back.

First, the most common issue: If you’re experiencing a lot of graphical lag, hitching, and other graphical errors, rolling back the drivers to a previous version can help. There may also be the case that while a driver update seems fine, it could be causing damage to your graphics card that you don’t know about. This isn’t uncommon, and oftentimes, a tech publication will report on any widespread driver issues so you know to rollback an update for the health of your rig. Finally, sometimes computers and components simply act up.

NVIDIA logo on green motherboard background

There may not be a specific reason for your graphics card to start having issues, but rolling back the drivers to an older version (while also checking other components' updates) can help resolve issues you couldn’t find a particular cause for. Rolling back your NVIDIA drivers can seem difficult if you haven’t done it before, but the process is simple regardless of whether you’re on Windows 10 or 11.

How to rollback your NVIDIA drivers through the Device Manager

You can usually roll back your NVIDIA drivers on Windows 10 and 11 with the Device Manager. There are two methods for finding the Device Manager menu: either open the Start Menu and search for Device Manager, or go to the Control Panel and select the Device Manager option from the list.

Once you click on the Roll Back Driver option, the drivers will be reverted to the previous version, and you should be good to go. However, sometimes the Roll Back Driver button is greyed out, so you can’t rollback drivers via this method. There is an alternative way of rolling back the NVIDIA drivers — it’s a few extra steps, but you’ll be able to get your GPU back to a properly working condition this way.

image of device manager Roll Back Driver option greyed out

How to rollback your NVIDIA drivers manually

If you can’t rollback your drives with Device Manager, you’ll need to go toNVIDIA’s driver websiteand download the driver version you want. To start, you need to know what GPU your computer has. This information is in the Device Manager menu, so if you didn’t jot it down, you can repeat the steps in the section above and copy down the model name. From there:

NVIDIA will then give you the results, which will always start with the latest drivers. Since you want an older driver version, click the View More Versions dropdown, and you’ll see various older drivers. Choose the version you want, and you can download it on the next page. However, before you install these older drivers, you need to uninstall the latest set first.

If the drivers you chose didn’t seem to fix the issue, you can keep trying to rollback until you find a version that works correctly with your computer. You can alsocheck to ensure all Windows drivers are up to dateand aren’t causing the issue.